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#5 - RW 262
Russia refuses to abandon nuclear program with Iran
June 19, 2003
AFP
Russia has brushed off increasingly loud US demands to halt its nuclear
cooperation with Iran, remaining the foremost world power helping the Islamic
regime develop what many fear is a nuclear weapons program.
US and European demands that Iran come entirely clean on its nuclear program
have fallen on deaf ears, prompting the West to turn its criticism on Russia's
construction of Iran's first nuclear power plant at Bushehr.
Yet they have made little headway there too.
Russia insists it will complete the Bushehr plant, supporting Iran's claim
that it is part of a plan to develop nuclear energy for peaceful means.
Yet many in the West wonder why oil-rich Iran -- which produces around 3.6
million barrels of crude per day -- needs to turn to nuclear energy.
Faced with increased criticism, Moscow has stepped up its calls that Tehran
sign an additional Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) protocol allowing the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to inspect all suspect sites, not just
those declared by Tehran.
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov again urged Iran to sign the protocol on Monday
following the IAEA's meeting in Vienna in which IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei
released a report saying Iran had failed to report certain nuclear activities.
Yet the same day, another Russian official called on IAEA governors in Vienna
to take a "measured and non-politicized" decision after analyzing the
report.
"We believe the reaction of the council of governors to this report must
be measured and non-politicised, and take all aspects into account," Deputy
Foreign Minister Yury Fedotov said.
And foreign ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko said Monday that a wave of
anti-regime protests sweeping Iran were the country's "internal
affair" -- in a thinly-veiled swipe at US support of the demonstrations.
Russia has clearly been seeking to avoid stirring up tensions with the United
States, with relations still on the mend following a bitter conflict over the
US-led war in Iraq.
Yet it is also seeking to defend an important market -- the Bushehr contract
alone is worth 800 million dollars (700 million euros) -- and show its public
that it does not bend to Washington's every whim.
These conflicting goals have led Russia to engage in a somewhat confused policy over the crisis, which heated up Wednesday with Iran's rejection of
the charges made in the IAEA report.
Different Russian officials make varying -- and sometimes conflicting -- statements almost daily.
In late May, Western officials -- including British Prime Minister Tony Blair
-- said Russian President Vladimir Putin had pledged at a G8 summit in France
that Russia would not sell Iran nuclear fuel until it signed the additional
protocol.
But Yakovenko and Atomic Energy Minister Alexander Rumyantsev later said
Russia would go ahead with the nuclear fuel shipments even without the
protocol.
The shipments are not due to begin until Tehran and Moscow sign a deal on the
return of spent fuel.
The document has been ready since August, but logistical problems --
including Russia's call for experts to carry out an environmental study -- have
slowed its signing, prompting some analysts to call the delay a hidden
concession to Washington.
Russia earlier this month delayed Bushehr's launch until 2005, another move
seen as an indirect concession.
But Putin himself has insisted Russia will not sever ties with Iran,
reiterating both at the G8 meet in France and at a series of summits held with
European and US leaders in Saint Petersburg last month that the cooperation
would continue.
Yet adding further to the confusion, he told US President George W. Bush in
Saint Petersburg that "the position of Russia and the US on the issue are
much closer than they seem."
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